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{
"@context": "https://schema.org/",
"@id": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1403889",
"@type": "ScholarlyArticle",
"creator": [
{
"@type": "Person",
"affiliation": "Unaffiliated",
"name": "Nygren, Johan"
}
],
"datePublished": "2018-08-21",
"description": "<p>ABSTRACT: The Gorilla Genome Project (Scally, 2012) showed that 30% of the gorilla genome introgressed into the ancestor of humans and chimpanzees, and that the two species diverged through lineage sorting with 15% ending up in <em>Pan</em> and another 15% in <em>Homo</em>. That introgression is the <em>Pan</em>-<em>Homo</em> split, hybridization, which led to speciation as the new hybrid lineages became reproductively isolated from one another.<br>\n<br>\nThe NUMT on chromosome 5 (&ldquo;ps5&rdquo;) (Popadin, 2017) fits perfectly with the introgression speciation model, it was formed from mtDNA that had diverged from the common ancestor of <em>Pan</em>-<em>Homo</em> for 1.8 Myr at the time of insertion into the nuclear genome, and originated in the <em>Gorilla</em> lineage. The ps5 pseudogene was transferred to <em>Pan</em> and <em>Homo</em> during the introgression event that led to the <em>Pan</em>-<em>Homo</em> split, 6 million years ago.</p>",
"headline": "Introgression from Gorilla caused the Human-Chimpanzee split",
"identifier": "https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1403889",
"image": "https://zenodo.org/static/img/logos/zenodo-gradient-round.svg",
"keywords": [
"evolution; human; chimpanzee; gorilla; introgression"
],
"license": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/",
"name": "Introgression from Gorilla caused the Human-Chimpanzee split",
"url": "https://zenodo.org/record/1403889"
}